Addiction Videos - The Documentary Network Explore the world beyond headlines with amazing videos. Wed, 20 Sep 2017 12:01:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.5 https://documentary.net/wp-content/themes/documentary/img/documentary-logo.png Documentary Network - Watch free documentaries and films 337 17 Explore the world beyond headlines with amazing videos. China’s Web Junkies – Internet Addiction Documentary https://documentary.net/video/chinas-web-junkies-internet-addiction-documentary/ https://documentary.net/video/chinas-web-junkies-internet-addiction-documentary/#comments Thu, 23 Jan 2014 15:26:51 +0000 http://documentary.net/?p=11020

Compulsive Internet use has been categorized as a mental health issue in many countries, including the United States, but China was among the first to label “Internet addiction” a clinical disorder. In this Op-Doc video, we show the inner workings of a rehabilitation center where Chinese teenagers are “deprogrammed.” The Internet Addiction Treatment Center, in Daxing, a suburb of Beijing, was established in 2004. It was one of the first of its kind – and there are now hundreds of treatment programs throughout China and South Korea. (The first inpatient Internet addiction program in the United States recently opened in Pennsylvania.) The program featured in this video admits teenagers, usually male, whose parents typically take them there against their will. Once inside, the children are kept behind bars and guarded by soldiers. Treatment, which often lasts three to four months, includes medication and therapy, and sometimes includes parents. Patients undergo military-inspired physical training, and their sleep and diet are carefully regulated. These techniques (some of which are also used in China to treat other behavioral disorders) are intended to help the patients reconnect with reality. Yet after four months of filming in this center (for our documentary “Web Junkie”), some vital questions remained: Are the children being accurately evaluated? And is the treatment effective? In many cases, it seemed parents were blaming the Internet for complex social and behavioral issues that may defy such interventions. (For example, we noticed that some patients experienced difficult family relationships, social introversion and a lack of friends in the physical world.) Tao Ran, the center’s director, claims a 70 percent success rate. If that’s true, perhaps China’s treatment model is something other nations should embrace, however disturbing it may seem to outsiders. There is still no real global consensus among experts about what constitutes addiction to the Internet, and whether the concept even exists, particularly in a strict medical sense. What is clear is that this issue is not confined to China. With millions (if not billions) glued to screens and electronic devices, the overuse of technology is becoming a universal, transnational concern. While treatment methods may vary, one way or another, we will need to find effective ways to moderate our use of technology and provide help to those who need it. This video is part of a series produced by independent filmmakers who have received support from the nonprofit Sundance Institute. New York Times.]]>

Compulsive Internet use has been categorized as a mental health issue in many countries, including the United States, but China was among the first to label “Internet addiction” a clinical disorder. In this Op-Doc video, we show the inner workings of a rehabilitation center where Chinese teenagers are “deprogrammed.” The Internet Addiction Treatment Center, in Daxing, a suburb of Beijing, was established in 2004. It was one of the first of its kind – and there are now hundreds of treatment programs throughout China and South Korea. (The first inpatient Internet addiction program in the United States recently opened in Pennsylvania.) The program featured in this video admits teenagers, usually male, whose parents typically take them there against their will. Once inside, the children are kept behind bars and guarded by soldiers. Treatment, which often lasts three to four months, includes medication and therapy, and sometimes includes parents. Patients undergo military-inspired physical training, and their sleep and diet are carefully regulated. These techniques (some of which are also used in China to treat other behavioral disorders) are intended to help the patients reconnect with reality. Yet after four months of filming in this center (for our documentary “Web Junkie”), some vital questions remained: Are the children being accurately evaluated? And is the treatment effective? In many cases, it seemed parents were blaming the Internet for complex social and behavioral issues that may defy such interventions. (For example, we noticed that some patients experienced difficult family relationships, social introversion and a lack of friends in the physical world.) Tao Ran, the center’s director, claims a 70 percent success rate. If that’s true, perhaps China’s treatment model is something other nations should embrace, however disturbing it may seem to outsiders. There is still no real global consensus among experts about what constitutes addiction to the Internet, and whether the concept even exists, particularly in a strict medical sense. What is clear is that this issue is not confined to China. With millions (if not billions) glued to screens and electronic devices, the overuse of technology is becoming a universal, transnational concern. While treatment methods may vary, one way or another, we will need to find effective ways to moderate our use of technology and provide help to those who need it. This video is part of a series produced by independent filmmakers who have received support from the nonprofit Sundance Institute. New York Times.]]>
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No Internet Week https://documentary.net/video/internet-week/ https://documentary.net/video/internet-week/#respond Wed, 08 Jan 2014 19:37:40 +0000 http://documentary.net/?p=10989

A documentary about addiction. Addiction of the digital kind. A film team deprived five ‘digital natives’ of their narcotic of choice for five days and recording the consequences. Will the outcome be positive? Or did it drive our subjects to distraction? Under the watchful eye of Psychotherapist Sarah Hirigoyen BSc (Hons), MaA, Adv. Dip, UKCP reg. the five participants had all access to the internet restricted for the whole of Internet Week. Their smarthpones we're replaced by old school ‘brick’ phones; every password from their social media and internet lives was taken away. The five participants were: James Brown, media legend and Editor, Sabotage Times @jamesjamesbrown Emily Hare, Managing Editor, Contagious @em2345 Katie MacKay, Advertising Executive and founder of www.whatkatiewore.com @whatkatiewore Maria Pizzeria, fashion blogger and social media ‘freak’ @mariapizzeria Sophie, a teenager (she’s 13)]]>

A documentary about addiction. Addiction of the digital kind. A film team deprived five ‘digital natives’ of their narcotic of choice for five days and recording the consequences. Will the outcome be positive? Or did it drive our subjects to distraction? Under the watchful eye of Psychotherapist Sarah Hirigoyen BSc (Hons), MaA, Adv. Dip, UKCP reg. the five participants had all access to the internet restricted for the whole of Internet Week. Their smarthpones we're replaced by old school ‘brick’ phones; every password from their social media and internet lives was taken away. The five participants were: James Brown, media legend and Editor, Sabotage Times @jamesjamesbrown Emily Hare, Managing Editor, Contagious @em2345 Katie MacKay, Advertising Executive and founder of www.whatkatiewore.com @whatkatiewore Maria Pizzeria, fashion blogger and social media ‘freak’ @mariapizzeria Sophie, a teenager (she’s 13)]]>
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Facebook Addicts https://documentary.net/video/facebook-addicts/ https://documentary.net/video/facebook-addicts/#respond Fri, 20 May 2011 20:38:08 +0000 http://documentary.net/?p=1595

Short documentary of Facebook addicts and the Careface Treatment Center in Norway. A new disease is coming up these days and this film shows how to deal with it properly. ;-) What are your experiences? ]]>

Short documentary of Facebook addicts and the Careface Treatment Center in Norway. A new disease is coming up these days and this film shows how to deal with it properly. ;-) What are your experiences? ]]>
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